Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR-A
. -
Legal Advertisements
. /GlA—Clarke County:
~ /hom It May Concern:
4§ /0. Price, of Clarke County,
§| Bia, having been selected by
; g ext of kin and having appiied
.~ Jletters of administration on
W eatate of Horatio B. Burton,
~ Peased, late of said county;
sis to cite all creditors and
g of said deceased to show
ause at the July term, 1934, at the
ourt of Ordinary of said county
hy letters of administration
should not be granted as prayed.
~ Witness the hand and seal of the
‘Ordinary of said County, this Bth
day of June, 1934.
- R. C. ORR, Ordinary.
?gn 8-15-22-29,
GEORGIA—CIarke County:
o All Whom It May Concern:
©W. K. Meadow, as Administra
tor of the estate of Miss Nellie
Colbert, deceased, having applied
to me by petition for leave to sell
the real estate, corporate stocks,
and certain personalty of said de
ceased, this is to notify the cred
ftors and kindred, and all con
v%homcd that said application will
‘be passed upon at the July term,
1934, of the Court of Ordinary of
said County, and that unless cause
Ig* then shown to the contrary said
leave will be granted.
~ This 7th day of June, 1934. ‘
s “R. C. ORR, Ordinary,
. . Clarke County, Georgia.
dn 8-15-22-29. |
GEORGIA—CIarke County: i
.-Will be sold before the court
‘house door in said State and
‘County, on the First Tuesday in
‘July, 1934, between the legal hours
.of sale, to the highest bidder for
‘eash, the following . described
_property, to-wit:
- Omne No. 6525, Combination Cof
fee Mill and Meat Grinding Ma
;;h” A. C. Currant, 220 Volts,
€0 Cycles.
~Sald property levied upon and
to hbe sold as the property of
‘Sandy P. Wortham, to satisfy an
execution obtained In the City
P ‘g‘ Athens, in favor of The
. Computing Scale Com-
' This June Gth, 1934.
& W. E. JACKSON, Sheriff,
A Clarke County, Georgia.
Jn 8-16-22-29.
GEORGIA—CIarke County:
- Whereas, Mrs. Kathleen Mc-
Corkle Landers, administratrix of
‘Walter H. Landers, represents to
the Court in_ her petition duly
filed and entered on record, that
“\he has fully administered Walter
- 4 Landers’ estate. This is there
. to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show
cause, if any they can, why sald
administratrix should not be dis
charged from her administration,
and receive letters of dismission,
on the first Monday in July, 1934.
. Witness my official hand and
‘geal of office, this 6th day of June,
1984,
o R. C. ORR, Ordinary.
Jn 8-15-22-29.
- GEORGIA—CIarke County:
*To the Superior Court of said
. County:
i The petition of J. M. Howell
i and L. W. Nelson respectfully
- shows:
1. That they, together with their
%moclates, successors and assigns,
i desire to be incorporated under
* the name and style of .Athens
- Steam Laundry, Inc., for the full
~ period of twenty years with the
* privilege of remewal as provided
.by law,
. 2, The principal office and place
.of business of said corporation
_ shall be in the city of Athens,
" Clarke County, Georgia. ‘
3. The object of said corpora
~ tion is pecuniary profit and gain
g‘m itself and shareholders.
-~ 4. The capita ] stock of said
i oorporation shall be Two Thous
* and ($2,000.00) Dollars divided in
%}‘;to shares of the par value of One
~ Hundred ($100.00) Dollars each,
~ with the privilege of increasing
#aid capital stock from time to
- time by a majority vote of the
s}77:'_7;nharoholders to any amount not
- exceeding Fifty Thousand ($50,-
© 000.00) Dollars; such increased
" capital stock to be common and
. Preferred, either or both, a%:la in
. such proportions as the share
g holders of said corporation shall
_ direct.
6. The particular business which
- #aid corporation proposes to carry
, On is that of operating a steam
- laundry business and such other
~ business or businesses as may be
~_ incidental therets.
‘m; 6. Petitioners desire that said
§§':'~oorpomt!on shall have ‘the right
. to borrow money, issue its notes,
5,;9 bonds or other obligations and
. smecure the payment of the same
by mortgage, deed of trust, secu
. rity deed or otherwise.
itt‘ WHEREFORE, petitioners pray
{ that said corporation may be in
. corporated under the name and
. style aforesaid with all the rights,
* powers, privileges and immunities
;; herein specifically prayed for, and
" such other rights, powers, privil
[« BBes and immunities as may bel
F Branted to similar corporations
. under existing laws or laws that
may hereafter be enacted.
A ERWIN, ERWIN & NIX,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
®¢ Filed in office this the sth day
¢ of June, 1934,
E. J. CRAWFORD, Clerk,
N ' Buperior Colirt of Clarke County,
s Georgia.
" GEORGIA—CIarke County:
¢ 1L E. J. Crawford, Clerk of the
. Superior Court of said County, do
eertify that the foregoing is a
*_ true and correct copy of the origi
. nal application for charter of
Steam Laundry, Inc., filed
by petiitioners therein as the same
" now appears of file in my office.
. Witness my official hand and
" seal, this the sth day of June,
. 1934. A
. E. J. CRAWFORD, Clefk,
. Superior Court of Clarke County,
. Georgia.
- GEORGIA—CIarke County:
~ Please take notice that the fol
~ lowing described property will be
~ sold at public outery to the high-
July 3, 1934, before the court
house door in said County, as the
property of Rene D. Tuck:
All that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in the City of
Athens, Clarke County, Georgia,
together with the Improvements
thereon, known as No. 420 Pea
body Street, according to the
present method of numbering
houses in the City of Athens,
Georgia, fronting South on Pea
body Street, and described as fol
lows:
Beginning at the Northwest
corner of the intersection of Pea
body Street with BlooWeld Street,
and running thence along Bloom
field Street in a northerly direc
tion 134 feet to a point; thence in
a westerly direction 167.9 feet to a
point; thence in a southerly direc
toon 139.4 feet to the North side
of Peabody Street; thence along
Peabody Street 154.8 feet to the
beginning corner.
Said property will be sold by
the Long Realty Company, as
signee of the hereinafter desgcribed
loan deed, as attorney in fact for
Rene D. Tuck, by virtue of the
power contained in loan deed exe
cuted by saild Rene D. Tuck to
Security Mortgage Company, dated
February Ist, 1930, and recorded
in Book 54, page 328, Clarke
County Records, Said deed was
given to secure a loan in the pras
ent principal sum of $3,350, on
'which interest coupons due Aug
‘ust 1, 1982, and February 1, 1933,
and principal reduction note due
February 1, 1933, and subsequent
payments, are still unpaid, said
loan has therefore been declared
due. The proceeds of @ said sale
will- be applied as provided in
said deed.
LONG KEALTY COMPANY,
As Attorney in Fact for Rene
D. Tuck.
W. B. CODY, Atty.,
701 Hurt Bullding,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Jn §-15-22-29,
GEQRGIA—CIarke County:
To the Superior Court of said
County:
The petition of Clarke County
Building, Loan & Improvement
Company respectfully shows the
following:
1, That said Clarke County
Building, Loan & Improvement
Company was incorporated by the
Superior Court of Clarke County,
Georgia, by an order granted the
third day of August, 1889, ' with
privilege of renewal at the expir
ation of twenty years from date.
2, That a renewal of said char
ter was granted by the Superior
Court of Clarke County on the
first day of July, 1909, to run for
twenty years from the third day
of ‘August, 1909, with privilege of
renewal at the expiration of
twenty years.
3. That sald renewed chartef
expired on the third day of Aug
ust, 1929, and that the expiration
was unknown to the officer, direc
tors or stiockholders of said com
pany.
4. That within five years from
the date of said expiration of char
ter said Clarke County Building,
Loan & Improvement Company
files this its application for a re
viver of said charter as allowed
by law, :
5. That gald tompany has con
tinued in business during the
period since said expiration of its
charter, and that at. a regular
meetng of the stockholders of said
company held in the offices of the
company on the 31st day of March,
1933, a resolution was unanimous
ly passed authorizing and direct
ing an application to be made for
the revival of said charter, a cer
tified copy of which resolution is
hereto attached and made a part
of this petition.
6. Petition shows that it de
sires a reviver of its said orlgmaé
charter and renewal thereof, sal
original charter bearing date of
August 3rd, 1889, and said renewal
thereto bearing date July Ist, 1909,
said reviver to take effect from
the date of the order hereunder
and said revived charter to run
for a period of twenty years from
the date of said order, with priv
ilege of renewal at the expiration
of said date.
7. Wherefore petitioner prays
for an order granting this petition
and that said original charter as
set forth in said renewal thereof
be revived for a period of twenty
years counting from the date of
said reviver with the privilege of
renewal at the expiration of said
date, and that all the property
and other rights of said corpora
tion shall continue in the corpora
tion as so revived and that the
acts and doings of such corpora
tion, in the period between the
date of the expiration of said
charter ang the date of revival,
shall be confirmed and held as the
acts and doings of the original and
renewed corporation so revived.
Respectfully,
| T. S. MELL,
Attorney for Petitioner.
Whereas the original charter of
this company was granted by the
Superior Court of Clarke County,
Georgia, on the third day of
August, 1889; that said charter
was renewed on the first day of
July, 1909, by proper order of said
court to run for a period of twenty
years from the third day of
August, 1909;
And Wwhereas said renewed
charter expired on the third day
of August, 1929, and that fact was
unknown to the officer, directors
and stockholders of said company:
And whereas it is desired to re
vive and renew said original and
renewed charter;
Theréfore, be it resolved by the
stockholders of said company in
annual meeting assemebled that
T. 8. Mell, as attorney for Clarke
County Building, Loan & Improve
ment Company, be authorized and
directed to make application to
the Superior Court of Clarke
County, Georgia, to revive said
charter and renew it for a period
of twenty years from the date of
the order so reviving, with the
privilege of renewal at the expira
tion of said twenty vears.
I certify that the foregoing reso
lution was unanimously adopted
by the stockholders of Clarke
County Building, Loan & Improve
ment Company, at the regular
annual meeting of the stockhold-
ers held at the office of the com
pany on the 31st day of March,
1933,
JOHN D. MELL,
Secretary.
GEORGIA—CIarke County:
I, E. J. Crgsiford, Clerk of the
Superior Court of Clarke County,
do heregy certify the fecregoing is
a true and correct copy of the
! petition of Clarke County Build
ing, Loan & Improvement Com
pany for revival of charter filed
in this office on the 28th day of
June, 1934,
Witness my official signature
and seal of saiq office, this the
28th day of June, 1934.
f E. J. CRAWFORD, Clerk.
lJn 29, Jly 6-13-20.
GEORGIA—CIarke County:
This is to notify all persons
having any claims against the
estate of Andrew M. Soule to file
‘the same with the undersigned,
and all people owing said estate
any money to make payments to
the undersigned Executrix of said
estate. 1
MES., LILLIE PORTER SOULE,
Executrix of the Estate of
Andrew M. Soule.
Jn 8-15-22-29, Jly 6-13.
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS
| All creditors of the estate of
’Miss Nellie Colbert, late of Clarke
County, deceased, are hereby noti
fied to render in their demands to
the undersigne@ according to law,
and all persons indebted to said
estate are required to make im
mediate payment.
June 11th, 1934.
W. K. MEADOW,
Administrator of Estate of Miss
Nellie Colbert, 416 Hurt Build
ing, Atlanta, Ga.
Jn 15-22-29, Jly 6-13-20
NOTICE OF PAVING for Dußose
Avenue, Childs Street, King
Avenue, Morton Avenue, Mil
ledge Terrace, Milledge Heights,
Bloomfield Street, Springdale
Street, Hall Street, University
Drive, Oakland Avenue, Hamp-
ton Court, Cloverhurst Avenue.
To All Property Owners Affected:
The Mayor and Council of the
City of Athens, have resolved that
paving of Dußose Avenue from
Grady Avenue to Lyndon Avenue,
Childs Street from Prince Avenue
to Barrow Street, King Avenue
from Cobb Street to the Brooklyn
Branch, a distance of two thous
and feet; Morton Avenue from
Milledge Avenue to Pinecrest
Drive, Milledge Terrace from Mil
lede Avenue to Carlton Terrace,
Milledge Heights from Milledge
Avenue to Carlton Terrace, Bloom
field Street from Baxter Street to
Cloverhurst Avenue, Springdale
Street from Milledge Avenue to
Bloomfield Street, Hall Street
from Bloomfield Street to Church
Street, University Drive from
Pinecrest Drive to Agricultural
Drive, Oakland Avenue from Mil
ledge Avenue to Stanton Way,
Hampton Court from Milledge
Avenue to Pinecrest Drive, Clover
‘hurst Avenue from Bloomfield
Street to Hall Street is deemed
| necessary by said body.
l All property owners are required
to file their oljiections, if any, un
‘der the terms of the Acts of the
JLegislature of Georgia for the
Year 1927, P, 321 et. seq.
This June 19th, 1934,
JAMES BARROW,
Clerk of the Mayor and Council of
the City of Athens.
Jn 22-29, Jly 6.
NOTICE OF THE FIRST
MEETING OF CREDITORS
In the District Court of the United
States for the Athens Division
of the Middle District of Geor-‘
gia, ¢ |
In the matter of Alexander H.
Eberhart, Bankrupt, in Bank
ruptey, 493.
To the Creditors of said Bank
rupt:
You are hereby notified that
there will be a-meeting of credi
tors of the above named bankrupt
on July 6th, 1934, at the United
States Court Room, Athens, Geor
gia, at 11 o'clock A, M. for the
purpose of examining bankrupt,
allowing claims, selecting a trus
tee, and transacting such other
.business as may come before said
meeting.
~ Athens, Georgia, this June 21st,
1934.
| W. G. CORNETT,
Referee in Bankruptcy.
NOTICE OF THE FIRST
MEETING OF CREDITORS
In the District Court of the United
States for the Athens Division
of the Middle District of Geor
gia.
In the matter of M. D. Hazen,
Trading as Florida Seafood
Company, Bankrupt, in Bank
ruptey. 494. :
To the Creditors of said Bank
rupt:
You are hereby notified that
there will be a meeting of credi
tors of the above named bankrupt
on July 6th, 1934, at the United
States Court Room, Athens, Geor
gia, at 11 o'clock A, M. for the
purpose of examining bankrupt,
allowing claims, selecting a trus
tee, and transacting -such other
business as may come befere said
meeting.
Athens, Georgia, this 21st day
of June, 1934. !
W. G. CORNETT,
Referee in Bankruptey.
NOTICE OF FIRST MEETING
OF CREDITORS
In the District Court of the United
States for the Middle District
of Georgia, Athens Division.
In the matter of Wm. Homer
Baird, Trading as Baird's De
partment Store, Athens, Georgia,
Bankrupt in Bankruptcy. No.
497.
To the Creditors:
You are hereby notified that
there will be a meeting of credi
tors of the above named bankrupt
on July 6 1934, at the United
States Court Room, Athens, Geor-
Zia, at 10 o'clock A. M., for the
purpose of examining bankrupt,
allowing claims, selecting a trus
tee ang transacting such other
business as may properly come
before said meeting.
At Athens, Georgia, this June
25, 1934. i
i W. G. CORNETT,
; ~ Referee in Bankruptcy,
THE BANNE R-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Strikers Threaten Onion Area Wa
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With violence threaterned that may bring a troop call, 750 union
jzed Ohio onion field workers are on strike in the Scioto marshes,
near McGuffey, 0., demaanding 36 cents an hour for an eight-hour
day, instead of 10 and 15 cents an hour for a 10-hour day. Pickets
have halted all work. In the top photo, a housewife watches her
husband and his four barefoot helpers at their back-wrenching
toil. Below is Bill Ham lin, weeder, who has spent 23 of his 29 years
in the marshes, with his family im t_hnir one-room shack, typieal of
the section. !
RODSEVELT3I6NG
* KERR BILL TOON
Measure Puts Tax on All
Excess Tobacco Raised
In Country ]
WASHINGTON —(#)—"The Kerr
bill, putting a tax on tobzveco mar
keted in excess of crop reduction
agreements, has been approved hy
President Roosevelt, malking the
government’s second step into
compulsory crop production con
trol. ;
The bill was introduced by Rep
resentative Kerr (D.-S. C.) and
as. signed by the Pregsidemt follows
the general outline of the Bank
head cotton law,
Its supporters said it was de
signed to protect growers who
comply with the AAA azreements
by penalizing non-conformmers and
tobacco producers have 30 days in
which 'they may sign yreduction
agreements to egcape the new
tax.
The law is applicable to the
1934-35 crop and the following
year it may apply to any type of
tobacco if three-fourths of the
growers of that type ask for it to
be continued. A tax of one-third
the sales price is provided on all
tobacco except Maryland, Vir
ginia sun-cured and cigar leaf,
marketed over and above AAA
allowances, on special - additional
quotas the secretary of agriculture
may assign in certain areas. How
ever, he may specify a tax as low
as 25 percent- :
The non-AAA quotas mhay bé
assigned up to 6 percent of the
tobacco prodpction of a <county, if
the secretary finds so' feww growers
in that county are under AAA
agreements that equitable distri
bution of production does not re
sult. These are linited to persons
whose allotments if they were
under AAA reductions wwould be
not less than 1,500 pounds.
In payment of the tax, internal
revenue collectors will homnor tax
exemption’ certificates issued to
the AAA and special quota Brow
ers in the amount of their allot
ments.,
. PRINCE MUST PAY
LONDON — #) — Prince Serge
Obolensky, found by a Jury to
have misconducted himself with
Mrs. Rilly Losch James, Viennsse
dancer, was ogdered Wednesday to
pay the general costs of the act
tion by which Edward Willis James
yesterday won a divorce decree
nisi. "
MRS. INSULL ENROUTE
PARlS—(#)—Mrs. Samuel Insull
left ' Thursday for the United
States with the smiling statement
‘that she will face “whatever new
problems life may bring.””
Mrs. Insull said her son, Samuel
Insull, jr, would meet her in New
!York when the Majestic docks,
Eases Headache
In 3 Minutes
also neuralgia, muscular achet
and pains, toothache, earache
periodical and other pains due
to inorganic causes. INoO nar
cotics. 10c and 25¢ packages,
KEEPS DOCTOR AWAY?
“SUDBURY, Ont,— (#) —Four
vear-old Cyril Paquette used to
smoke a pipe, but since he broke
1t has has to -be satisfied with a
cigaret a day, and an occasional
cigar,
His mother, Mrs. E. Paquett,
says he has . been smoking since
he was two and is strong, healthy
and unusually tall for his age.
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OLDIERS revolt against their superiors, * @ Y g
riotous mobs “pillage“and destroy,” con- %”,% ff A ¥y B o
. R R A R 4P
stituted authority is challenged—another - e B A
government falls. ‘ : . 5
Reporting the news of turbulent national crises is an acid test of a press association’s efficiency.
b . ' .p 98 & L . & .
Rumors fly thick and fast, facts are difficult to verify." Partisans of conflicting interests strive vigor:
ously to influence news dispatches for their own benefit. Ao
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS correspondents are respected and welcomed in the capitals of the
world because statesmen and officials are familiar with the high standards of the organization they
- O : 4 3
represent. These reporters’ sole task is to report the news—facts untarnished by bias or propaganda
— means
Assoczated
Press
LIGRANGE COMPANY
WEND B FACLE
“Can’'t Return Something
We Have Never Had,”
Secretary Says
WASHINGTON—(P)—NRA, after
looking into charges of code vio
lations on GGeorgia highway con
struction projects, has ordered the
‘Whitley Construction company of
LaGrange, Ga., to turn in its Blue
Fagle but the secretary to the
company’'s president says it nevet
has had a Blue Eagle and ‘can
not return something it has not
had.”
John Whitley, president of the
construction company and a mem
ber of the official staff of Gover
nor Talmadge, was at his farm
several miles from LaGrange after
the action of NRA was made pub
lic and could not be reached. How
ever, his secretary said the com
pany has never Bigned the code
and hag never had the Blue Eagle.
Whether the case will he turned
over to the justice department for
prosecution was not divulged by
the NRA, which announced that
the Whitley Construction company
had been *“ordered to surrender its
Blue Bagle to the local postmaster.
The company. wag found. to have
violated the wage and hour pro
vigions of the construction code.”
A spokesman for NRA sald the
company was under the law re
gardless of whether it signed the
code and theoretically displayed
the Blue Eagle. If not actually,
this spokesinan said, Whitley then
theoretically surrenders the KEagle.
While refusing to discuss fur
ther steps to be taken, the usual
procedure after a Blue FEagle is
ordered turned in ig to submit the
evidence to the justice department
to determine whether prosecution
should be brought.
Meanwhile, negotiations were
under way for settlement of an
other Georgia compliance cage,
that of the Mcßae court house
which also involves a project fi
nanced by a governing body. The
recovery act recognizes that righl
of states and their political sub
divisions to fix thelr own wages
and hours in certain instances on
- projects financed entirely by funds
from the treasury of these govern
ing bodies.
In the Mcßae courthouse case,
Major George 1. Berry, deputy ad
ministrator handling the case, is
ecarrying on an active correspon
dence with county authorities in
the hope of bringing labor on this
work under the construction code
wage and hour standards. The
; —and accord fair’ and impartial treatment to the conflicting parties to a
© dispute. ’ b
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Athens Banner-Herald
Savannah Pastorate Is
Not Tet Decided Upon
VALDOSTA, Ga—(#)—The Rev.
P. M, Belew, district superintend
ent in Georgia of the church of the
Nazarene, said todhy he had not
vet decided who will be pastor of
the Savannah church.
The superintendent said he was
conferring: with the ' Rev. ¢ L,
Davis of Ramsey, Ind., and the
Rev. T, F. Bowers of Greensboro,
N. C.,, regarding the Savannah
post,
A conference with the Savannah
church will be held July & he
said.
200 Workers Walk
Out at Rayon Mills
In Richmond Today
Richmond, Va—#)—R. T. Bow
den, special representative of the
state federation of labor said to
day he had been advised that
about 200 workers walked out of
the Hopewell rayon plant of the
Tubize-Chatillon corporation this
morning at 4 o'clock.
Mr. Bowden, said he had been
further advised that practically no
one appeared for the shify due to
0o on duty at 7 a. m. 3
Strike action at the Hopewell
plant had been threatened sot
some time following differences be-
itween the wmanagement and mem
brs of the United Textile Workers
union over the laying off of sev
}eral hundred workers in recent
months, The bill management
clajmed the layoffs were due to
slack business while the union
leaders asserted that active mem
bers of the emplovees organization
had felt the brunt of the dis
charges and that the company had
departed from its regular custom
iof “staggering”’ the work when
there was not enough to keep all
busy.
complaint in this case charged tha
authorities required contractors to
bid on an hour and wage basls
sharply out of line with code re.
quirements. One county official
has questioned the right of NRA
to interfere in the case.
Regarding the Whitley case, com
plaints filed before NRA said the
company has pald labor on its road
jobs as lowas 10 cents an hour
and worked the men 10 to 16 hours
a day. The company {8 suc
cessful bidder for a large block
of state highway construction.
FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1934,
Business Increases
Shown for May iy
Nearly All Lines
ATLANTA — (#) — Business |y.
creases for the month of May gyep
the previous month are reporteq
for five separate lines of activity
in the monthly review of the Peg.
erai Reserve Bank of Atlanty for
the sixth reserve district.
The bank’s report - today was
that statistics showed ‘ineregseg in
department store sales, in whole.
ale trade, textile activity, the pras
duction of pig iron and coal and
in building permits.
Hewever, it was noted that 00N~
tract awards declined from the
April level, but all of the varigys
businesses were at a higher plang
than in May, 1933 except thoge re
lating to textile, :
. While total consumption of cot
ton icnreased from April to May,
the daily average declined some
what, and was 16.4 per cent leg
than in May a year &go when
textile activity was increasing
rapidly, the bank stated,
CONFERENCE POSTPONED
BRUNSWICK, Ga. —(#)— The
governors’. conference scheduled at
Sea, Island beach tomorrow and
Saturday to discuse a promotional
and development program for six
sOutheastern states, today was
postponed.
Wm Blck Pep ') ovlzor s Vltllity
Medical authorities agree that your kid
neys contain 15 MILES of tiny tubes or
filters which help to purify the blood and
‘keep you healthy.
If you have trouble with too frequent
‘bladder passages with scanty amount caus
'ing burning and discomfort, the 16 MILES
‘ of kidney tubes need washing out. This dan.
ger signal may be the beginming of nagging
} backsache, leg pains, loss of pep and vitality,
getting up nights, lumbago, swollen feet
and ankles, rheumatic pains and dizziness.
If kidneys don’t empty 3 pints every day
and g:::irid of 4 pounds of waste matter,
your y will take up these poisons causing
serious trouble. It may knock you out and
lay you up for many months. Don't walt,
Ask your druggist for DOAN’S PILLS ...
a doctor's prescription . . . which has been
used successfully by millions of kidney suf.
fevers for over 40 years, They give quick
i relief and will help to wash out the 15
MILES of kidney tubes. ®
But don't take chances with strong drugs
or so-called “kidney cures’ that claim to fix
you up in 15 minutes, for they may seriously
! injure and irritate delicate tissues. Insist
on DOAN'S PILLS . . . the old reliable re
lief that contain no “dope” or habit-forming
drugs. Be sure you get DOAN'S.PILLS
at your druggist. © 1934, Foster-Milburn Co,